pdc093 said:Hope everything is well with you, 'hawg.Quote:
had a bad night and overslept.
You are a TA treasure.
Can't tell you how informative and valued your knowledge and expertise (for us 'lay' folks) has been with this thread.
THANK YOU!
pdc093 said:Hope everything is well with you, 'hawg.Quote:
had a bad night and overslept.
You are a TA treasure.
Can't tell you how informative and valued your knowledge and expertise (for us 'lay' folks) has been with this thread.
THANK YOU!
Not when the state's own ME said he could NOT say but/for Chauvin's knee to the neck Floyd would have survived and further that under any other circumstances he would have found the manner of death to be an OD and not homicide.thirdcoast said:
He calls for his momma in the 2019 arrest also. So the dramatic value on that aspect is reduced a bit. Also he is ultimately cooperative, but not immediately in the 19' video.
That all said, I don't see that doing with a 2020 video of a handcuffed and unconcious Floyd with a knee on his neck. Just too powerful of evidence against an OD argument.
aggiehawg said:I wouldn't say that necessarily. No matter how the media and the prosecution tries to spin it, this is not case about racism. And I think older jurors will be more immune to that type of appeal than younger it's-all-about-the-feelz jurors. My .02.Keegan99 said:
Only two white males and none over the age of 40? That's not good.
And that's the pond that the state will use a peremptory to strike until they run out of them.Keegan99 said:aggiehawg said:I wouldn't say that necessarily. No matter how the media and the prosecution tries to spin it, this is not case about racism. And I think older jurors will be more immune to that type of appeal than younger it's-all-about-the-feelz jurors. My .02.Keegan99 said:
Only two white males and none over the age of 40? That's not good.
A white male over 40 is almost assuredly the least likely "go along to get along" demographic. If you need a juror to attend their ground in deliberations, that's the pond you should be fishing in.
Demographics aren't always enough. I had an oil and gas lease termination jury trial where we had a couple of substantial businessmen over 40 on the jury, and they let a 40 year old female prison guard dominate the deliberations and cow them in to finding no cessation of production (this lady told them that she would only find a cessation if there was video tape showing the well not pumping for the requisite time period--the operator was an old man missing a leg).aggiehawg said:And that's the pond that the state will use a peremptory to strike until they run out of them.Keegan99 said:aggiehawg said:I wouldn't say that necessarily. No matter how the media and the prosecution tries to spin it, this is not case about racism. And I think older jurors will be more immune to that type of appeal than younger it's-all-about-the-feelz jurors. My .02.Keegan99 said:
Only two white males and none over the age of 40? That's not good.
A white male over 40 is almost assuredly the least likely "go along to get along" demographic. If you need a juror to attend their ground in deliberations, that's the pond you should be fishing in.
The two jurors I am most concerned about is the one in her early twenties we have dubbed Ms. AWESOME and the nurse in her fifties.
Quote:
Ms. AWESOME and the nurse in her fifties.
aggiehawg said:Not when the state's own ME said he could NOT say but/for Chauvin's knee to the neck Floyd would have survived and further that under any other circumstances he would have found the manner of death to be an OD and not homicide.thirdcoast said:
He calls for his momma in the 2019 arrest also. So the dramatic value on that aspect is reduced a bit. Also he is ultimately cooperative, but not immediately in the 19' video.
That all said, I don't see that doing with a 2020 video of a handcuffed and unconcious Floyd with a knee on his neck. Just too powerful of evidence against an OD argument.
Throw in the police training manual showing the maximal restraint technique including the knee restraint, the body cam video wherein the officers discuss concern for Floyd and excited delirium??
That's a lot of reasonable doubt thrown into the mix.
I'm may not know the details but hope you never sit on my jury. None of us know cause of death, how you can state the above as fact, I find disturbing. Nothing personal.thirdcoast said:aggiehawg said:Not when the state's own ME said he could NOT say but/for Chauvin's knee to the neck Floyd would have survived and further that under any other circumstances he would have found the manner of death to be an OD and not homicide.thirdcoast said:
He calls for his momma in the 2019 arrest also. So the dramatic value on that aspect is reduced a bit. Also he is ultimately cooperative, but not immediately in the 19' video.
That all said, I don't see that doing with a 2020 video of a handcuffed and unconcious Floyd with a knee on his neck. Just too powerful of evidence against an OD argument.
Throw in the police training manual showing the maximal restraint technique including the knee restraint, the body cam video wherein the officers discuss concern for Floyd and excited delirium??
That's a lot of reasonable doubt thrown into the mix.
Thats a dash of reasonable doubt sprinkled on video evidence of an unconcious handcuffed man being choked with deadly force.
I could say the same thing about any other person with serious health issues who was choked to death. Maybe even an elderly white man on deathbed in hospital, who died coincidentally after a black nurse held a pillow over his face.
I hate the racism nonsense narrative and sensationalism over this case, but at best Chauvin killed this man unintentionally with wreckless or excessive force. It became excessive/wreckless after Floyd became unconcious.
We will see how powerful the defense OD argument is and where the jury lands in relation to law.
But you are the one claiming Floyd was choked to death without any medical evidence to back that up.Quote:
I'm not on the jury. But interesting that you don't apply the same principle to those here claiming OD as cause of death, assuming you or a family member were the victim.
bcasey03 said:
Do you really not know what choking is?
Just looking for your personal opinion. What numbers do you put on the probabilities of OD vs lack of oxygen?thirdcoast said:
I'm not on the jury. But interesting that you don't apply the same principle to those here claiming OD as cause of death, assuming you or a family member were the victim.
Math is on my side in terms of probabilities of OD vs
lack of oxygen. BUT of course presumption of innocence, and fair due process must commence.
aggiehawg said:But you are the one claiming Floyd was choked to death without any medical evidence to back that up.Quote:
I'm not on the jury. But interesting that you don't apply the same principle to those here claiming OD as cause of death, assuming you or a family member were the victim.
The OD theory as the origin of the cardiopulmonary arrest is based on medical evidence.
The prosecutions theory of the crime is that but for Chauvin's actions, Floyd would have survived just long enough to die of an overdose. Bold strategy but in this political climate it just might work.thirdcoast said:aggiehawg said:Not when the state's own ME said he could NOT say but/for Chauvin's knee to the neck Floyd would have survived and further that under any other circumstances he would have found the manner of death to be an OD and not homicide.thirdcoast said:
He calls for his momma in the 2019 arrest also. So the dramatic value on that aspect is reduced a bit. Also he is ultimately cooperative, but not immediately in the 19' video.
That all said, I don't see that doing with a 2020 video of a handcuffed and unconcious Floyd with a knee on his neck. Just too powerful of evidence against an OD argument.
Throw in the police training manual showing the maximal restraint technique including the knee restraint, the body cam video wherein the officers discuss concern for Floyd and excited delirium??
That's a lot of reasonable doubt thrown into the mix.
Thats a dash of reasonable doubt sprinkled on video evidence of an unconcious handcuffed man being choked with deadly force.
I could say the same thing about any other person with serious health issues who was choked to death. Maybe even an elderly white man on deathbed in hospital, who died coincidentally after a black nurse held a pillow over his face.
I hate the racism nonsense narrative and sensationalism over this case, but at best Chauvin killed this man unintentionally with wreckless or excessive force. It became excessive/wreckless after Floyd became unconcious.
We will see how powerful the defense OD argument is and where the jury lands in relation to law.
Every jury has different dynamics at play. I have stated before that most every time I guessed who would end up being the foreperson of the jury, I was wrong.schwack schwack said:Quote:
Ms. AWESOME and the nurse in her fifties.
Agree on these 2. Not too worried about Ms. AWESOME because I think the others will also pick up on her eagerness & youth.
Can the jurors be instructed to NOT talk about their work experience? If you know a nurse is on the panel, the normal response of the others, I'd assume, would be to ask her opinion on things. She's certainly been cautioned on that, but no one from the court is in there to object. To me, she is the most questionable, but honestly if you think back to the first people chosen most of them had negative views of Chauvin so any of them could be disruptive in deliberations. I think Cahill was awfully permissive & tried hard to rehabilitate several sitting jurors.
edit: Even if she never spoke up but they know she's a nurse, would her "vote" sway others because they might assume she understood the intricate medical stuff better?
Over three times the lethal dose of fentanyl AND methamphetamines. Speedballing in other words.Quote:
This case is different because it was a cop supposedly doing his job and Floyd was high on drugs. I get it.
I haven't seen that math.thirdcoast said:
I'm not on the jury. But interesting that you don't apply the same principle to those here claiming OD as cause of death, assuming you or a family member were the victim.
Math is on my side in terms of probabilities of OD vs
lack of oxygen. BUT of course presumption of innocence, and fair due process must commence.
thirdcoast said:aggiehawg said:But you are the one claiming Floyd was choked to death without any medical evidence to back that up.Quote:
I'm not on the jury. But interesting that you don't apply the same principle to those here claiming OD as cause of death, assuming you or a family member were the victim.
The OD theory as the origin of the cardiopulmonary arrest is based on medical evidence.
The only medical evidence I have seen that could even be applied to temporary strangulation of oxygen to brain would be tiny spots under skin called "petechiae". I have no idea whether that is more or less visible in certain skin pigments. All dead bodies show signs of no oxygen regardless of how they died. If im a ME and get a body with no understanding of circumstances the body went thru, I may come to a conclusion on drugs.
People get choked unconcious all the time on video with no bodily damage or any evidence they were choked. I don't understand how that point is so hard to grasp.
If you could show medical evidence/damage after being choked unconcious, your argument would be stronger. But in reality the difference between someone being temporary unconcious and dead from a choke hold is a just few minutes.
Sometimes people are strangled to death and video or witness testimony leads to a conviction regardless of medical evidence. This case is different because it was a cop supposedly doing his job and Floyd was high on drugs. I get it.
rwpag71 said:Just looking for your personal opinion. What numbers do you put on the probabilities of OD vs lack of oxygen?thirdcoast said:
I'm not on the jury. But interesting that you don't apply the same principle to those here claiming OD as cause of death, assuming you or a family member were the victim.
Math is on my side in terms of probabilities of OD vs
lack of oxygen. BUT of course presumption of innocence, and fair due process must commence.